Category specific knowledge modulate capacity limitations of visual short-term memory

Jonas Olsen Dall*, Katsumi Watanabe, Thomas Alrik Sorensen

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    We explore whether expertise can modulate the capacity of visual short-term memory, as some seem to argue that training affects capacity of short-term memory [13] while others are not able to find this modulation [12]. We extend on a previous study [3] by demonstrating expertise effects by investigating different groups of healthy adults. In a whole report paradigm [5] we investigate performance on standardized pictures [11], Latin letters, and Japanese hiragana. Expertise was modulated between groups of novice (Danish university students), trained (Danish university students studying Japanese), and expert observers (Japanese university students). For both the picture and the letter condition we find no performance difference in memory capacity, however, in the critical hiragana condition we demonstrate a systematic difference relating expertise differences between the groups. These results are in line with the theoretical interpretation that visual short-term memory is the sum of the reverberating feedback loops to representations in long-term memory.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publication2016 8th International Conference on Knowledge and Smart Technology, KST 2016
    PublisherInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
    Pages275-280
    Number of pages6
    ISBN (Print)9781467381376
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2016 Mar 23
    Event8th International Conference on Knowledge and Smart Technology, KST 2016 - Chiangmai, Thailand
    Duration: 2016 Feb 32016 Feb 6

    Other

    Other8th International Conference on Knowledge and Smart Technology, KST 2016
    Country/TerritoryThailand
    CityChiangmai
    Period16/2/316/2/6

    Keywords

    • Capacity
    • Expertise
    • Short-term memory
    • Training

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Computer Science Applications
    • Health Informatics
    • Computer Networks and Communications
    • Education
    • Artificial Intelligence

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